This image, called “The Fall of Icarus,” shows skydiver Gabriel C. Brown free‑falling at about 3,500 feet while astrophotographer Andrew McCarthy captured his silhouette against a high‑resolution view of the Sun’s surface, using hydrogen‑alpha telescopes and weeks of precise planning to line up the jump with the solar disc.
Elephantearfanatic on
I thought it was a rare Bigfoot sighting
Savings_Store_7231 on
What in the Van Gogh
53180083211 on
I thought it was another microscope slide with “secretions” and a tiny baby, wearing a parachute for fun.
Radioaktivelement on
Most pr promoted photo in 2025
Erasmusings on
Cooooooooooooool
#

RisottoPensa on
I tought this was another kind of dry vaginal discharge under microscope
/s
mrafinch on
I’ve got a massive head cold and this picture is tripping me out, my guys.
9 Comments
This image, called “The Fall of Icarus,” shows skydiver Gabriel C. Brown free‑falling at about 3,500 feet while astrophotographer Andrew McCarthy captured his silhouette against a high‑resolution view of the Sun’s surface, using hydrogen‑alpha telescopes and weeks of precise planning to line up the jump with the solar disc.
I thought it was a rare Bigfoot sighting
What in the Van Gogh
I thought it was another microscope slide with “secretions” and a tiny baby, wearing a parachute for fun.
Most pr promoted photo in 2025
Cooooooooooooool
#

I tought this was another kind of dry vaginal discharge under microscope
/s
I’ve got a massive head cold and this picture is tripping me out, my guys.
Very cool
Gonna flood the sub with this old post again?